ROSE FAMIL^Y. 121 



S. .pruilif61ia, from Japan : slender shrub, with small orate finely and 

 sharpy' serrate leaves, smooth above, often minutely downy beneath ; the form 

 cultivated has full-double pure white blossoms, 4' in diameter, produced in groat 

 abundance. 



§ 2. Shrubby, with pinnate Reaves. 



S. sorbifdlia. Cult, from Siberia, very hardy, 3° - 4° high, with leaves 

 (;i3 the name denotes) resembling those of the Mountain-Ash, of 17 - 21 lan- 

 ceolate taper-pointed doubly and sharply serrate leaflets, and white flowers in 

 aa ample terminal panicle, the narrow pods a little cohering. 



§ 3 . Herbs, with thrice pinnatdy-campound leaves, no stipules, and dioecious flowers. 



S. Ari!incu.S, Goatsbeard. Rich woods from New York S. & W., also 

 in some gardens : smooth, 3° - .'5° high ; with lancc-oblong or lance-ovate taper- 

 pointed leaflets sharply serrate and cut, and 'yellowish-white very small flowers 

 in great numbers, crowded in slender spikes which are collected in a great com- 

 pound panicle ; petals narrow ; pedicels reflexed in fruit. 



§ 4. Herbs, with interruptedly pinnate leares, conspicuous stipules, perfect flowers, 

 reflexed sepals and petals sometimes 4, and 5-12 little I - 3-seedea pods. 



S. Pilip6ndula, Deopwort. Cult, from Europe l some of the coarse 

 long fibrous roots swollen at the lower end into oblong tubers ; herbage smooth 

 and green ; leaves chiefly from or near the ground, with many oval or lanceolate 

 leaflets deeply toothed, cut, or pinnately cleft, and gradually diminishing in size 

 downwards ; the nearly naked stems l°-2° high, bearing a compound terminal 

 cyme of white or rosy-tipped flowers, one variety full-double. 



S. TTlm^ria, English Meadow-Swbet. Cult, from Europe; l°-3° 

 high, nearly smooth, except the lower surface of the lyrate and interruptedly 

 pinnate leaves which is minutely white-downy ; the yellowish-white small and 

 sweet-scented flowers very numerous and crowded in a compound cyme at the 

 naked summit of the stems ; little pods twisting spirally. 



S. lob&ta, QnEEN-OP-THE-PRAiKiB. Wild iu meadows and prairies W., 

 also cult. : smooth and green ; the leaves mostly from or near the ground ; the 

 end leaflet very large, 7 - 9-parted, and its lobes cut-toothed ; stems 2° - 5° or ' 

 even 8° high, bearing an ample and panicled compound cyme crowded with the 

 handsome peach-blossom-colored flowers.- Bruised foliage exhales the odor of 

 Sweet Birch. 



3. GILLENIA, INDIAN PHYSIC, AMERICAN IPECAC. (Named 

 for a Dr. GiUen or Gillenius. ) El. summer, y. 



G. trifoli&ta. Common I. or Bowman's-Root. Rich woods, from New 

 York S. & W. ; smooth, branching, 2° high, with the 3 ovate-oblong pointed 

 leaflets cut-toothed, entire stipules small and slender, and rather pretty white or 

 scarcely rosy-tinged flowers loosely panicled on the slender branches. 



G. stipulicea, Lakge-supuled I. or American Ipecac. Open woods, 

 W. : has the lanceolate leaflets and leaf-like stipules deeply cut and toothed -. 

 othervvise like the other. 



4. KEEEIA. (Named for Bellenden Ker, a British botanist.) 



K. Jap6nica, Corchoeus, so-called, of the gardens, from Japan : a fa- 

 miliar, smooth, ornamental shrubby plant, 4° - 8° high, with lance-ovate thin 

 leaves, and handsome yellow flowers, in summer, usually full-double ; — the 

 natural state, with 5 petals and numerous stamens only recently introduced 

 •and rare. 



5. WALDSTEINIA. (Named iin F. von Waldstein, an Austrian bota- 

 nist.) 



W. fragarioldes, Barken Strawberry. Wooded banks, chiefly N. ; 

 in aspect and especially in the 3 broadly wedge-shaped leaflets resembles A 

 Strawberry-plant (as the specific and the popular names denote), but is smooth- 

 ish and ycUow-flowtred : in summer. 2/ 



